Beställningsvara. Skickas inom 5-8 vardagar. Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.
"When things move, things change." Starting from this deceptively simple premise, Silvia Spitta opens a fascinating window onto the profound displacements and transformations that have occurred over the six centuries since material objects and human subjects began circulating between Europe and the Americas.This extended reflection on the dynamics of misplacement starts with the European practice of collecting objects from the Americas into Wunderkammern, literally "cabinets of wonders." Stripped of all identifying contexts, these exuberant collections, including the famous Real Gabinete de Historia Natural de Madrid, upset European certainties, forcing a reorganization of knowledge that gave rise to scientific inquiry and to the epistemological shift we call modernity. In contrast, cults such as that of the Virgin of Guadalupe arose out of the reverse migration from Europe to the Americas. The ultimate marker of mestizo identity in Mexico, the Virgin of Guadalupe is now fast crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, and miracles are increasingly being reported. Misplaced Objects then concludes with the more intimate and familial collections and recollections of Cuban and Mexican American artists and writers that are contributing to the Latinization of the United States.Beautifully illustrated and radically interdisciplinary, Misplaced Objects clearly demonstrates that it is not the awed viewer, but rather the misplaced object itself that unsettles our certainties, allowing new meanings to emerge.
Silva Spitta is Professor of Spanish and Comparative Literature at Dartmouth College. She is the author of Between Two Waters: Narratives of Transculturation in Latin America.
PrefaceIntroduction: Misplaced Objects and Subject MattersPart I: The Object as Specimen1. Misplaced Objects from the Americas and the Emergence of the European Wunderkammern2. Transatlantic Subject Matters and Big Bones: The Real Gabinete de Historia Natural de Madrid3. Writing the Natural History of Our Destruction: From P. T. Barnum's National Histrionics to Contemporary, Post-Apocalyptic WunderkammernPart II: Migrating Icons and Sacred Geographies in the Americas4. GuadalupeNation: Disappearing Objects, National Narratives5. Guadalupe's Wheels: Runaway Image, Undocumented Border Crosser, Miracle Worker6. The New Mexico/New Mestizo Effect: Enchanted and Otherwise Enacted SpacesPart III: Found Objects and Re-Collecting Subjects7. Re-Collecting the Past: Latinidad's Found Objects, Photographs, and Home Altars8. Sandra Ramos and the Cuban Diaspora: La vida no cabe en una maletaEpilogueNotesWorks CitedIndex
Misplaced Objects is an erudite, elegantly narrated, historically wide-ranging, and genuinely transdisciplinary exploration that should transform contemporary understandings of the Americas in numerous fields. (The Comparatist)